[78-L] Donald Lee Nelson
Cary Ginell
soundthink at live.com
Mon Jul 1 14:19:23 PDT 2013
Sorry - those dates for the Jazz Man Record Shop are 1939-1984.
CG
> From: soundthink at live.com
> To: 78-l at klickitat.78online.com
> Date: Mon, 1 Jul 2013 14:17:25 -0700
> Subject: [78-L] Donald Lee Nelson
>
> Just wanted to note the passing of Donald Lee Nelson, a member of the vaunted "Saturday Crowd" of the Jazz Man Record Shop, who I profiled in my book on the venerable, but lamented collectors shop (1939-194). Nelson was a collector of hillbilly records and at one time had a phenomenal collection. It had been sold off years before he entered an assisted living facility in Woodland Hills, Calif.
> Donald Lee (nobody called him Don) wrote a series of thoughtful and well-researched articles on event ballads of the 1920s (published in the JEMF Quarterly) and often took trips to Appalachia and the South to interview members of old-time string bands, including people like Emry Arthur and Lee Allen of the Allen Brothers and pioneering Cajun performer Moise Robin. He did a great job researching the life of Buddy Jones for an early Texas Rose LP I produced and was fascinated by the life and personae of Louisiana scoundrels like Jimmie Davis and Huey Long. In fact, when Nelson put on a straw boater, he looked remarkably like the Kingfish.
> One time, on one of my own field expeditions to East Texas, Nelson had asked me to see if I could track down the gravesite of Prince Albert Hunt. I finally found it, with the name "Archie A. Hunt" inscribed on the tombstone - I've never seen Nelson happier than when I made him a copy of the picture of the stone that I took. He loved tromping around graveyards looking for musicians. I got infected by that bug when I sought out Leon Chappelear's final resting place near Shreveport, Louisiana (a photo of it is in my CD reissue of Chappelear's music).
> Nelson taught me the basics of cooking 'country style.' He worked as a sommelier and buyer at the restaurant in the Ambassador Hotel, so I learned about the finer methods of cooking as well as the ones favored by the folk. He was a great friend and vastly improved our knowledge of early country music.
> A fine Southern gentleman, Donald Lee Nelson was 71.
> Requiescat in pace
>
> Cary Ginell
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